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Ann, Lady Fanshawe

Ann, Lady Fanshawe

FieldValue
nameAnn Fanshawe, Lady Fanshawe
imageAnn Fanshawe (1625–1680), wife of Sir Richard Fanshawe.jpeg
captionAnn, Lady Fanshawe, by Cornelis Janssens van Ceulen
birth_nameAnn Harrison
birth_date25 March 1625
birth_placeparish of St Olave Hart Street, London, England
death_date
death_placeprobably at Ware, Hertfordshire, England
resting_placeWare, Hertfordshire
occupationwriter
languageEnglish
nationalityBritish
genrememoir, recipes
notableworks*Memoir*
spouse
relativesSir John Harrison (father)
website
portaldisp

Ann Fanshawe, Lady Fanshawe (25 March 1625 – 20 January 1680) was an English memoirist and cookery author. Her recipe for ice cream is thought to be the earliest recorded in Europe.

Her ice cream recipe is recorded as follows: "Take three pints of the best cream, boil it with a blade of Mace or else perfume it with orange flower water or Ambergreece, sweeten the Cream, with sugar let it stand till it is quite cold, then put it into Boxes, ether of Silver or tinn, then take, Ice chopped into small pieces and put it into a tub and set the Boxes in the Ice covering them all over, and let them stand in the Ice two hours, and the Cream Will come to be Ice in the Boxes, then turn them out into a salvar with some of the same seasoned Cream, so serve it up to the Table."

Early life and education

[[Balls Park

Ann (or Anne) Harrison was born on 25 March 1625 in the parish of St Olave Hart Street, London. She was the eldest daughter of Sir John Harrison of Hertfordshire and Margaret Fanshawe. Great grandchild of Christopher Gardiner of Urswick, Lancs. She had three brothers and a sister. Her childhood was spent in London and at Balls Park, Hertford.

Her mother took great pains with her education, directing her attention more especially to domestic usefulness. Fanshawe liked not only French, needlework and music, but riding and running, and described herself with hindsight as "what we graver people call a hoyting girle."

Her mother died in July 1640, when Fanshawe was fifteen years old, but she was left capable of managing her father's household with discretion and economy. The father remarried, having a son and a daughter by his second wife.

Career

Ann's family was Royalist and they moved with the court to Oxford during the English Civil War. However, since her father was a fierce royalist the war brought hardships upon her family when the war broke out. They ultimately had to flee to Oxford where they resided. Her memoir she wrote gave great detail on the lifestyle and hardships the family endured during the time. In 1644, at the age of nineteen, she married at Wolvercote near Oxford, her second cousin, Richard (later Sir Richard) Fanshawe (1608–1666). He was also Royalist and was secretary of war to Prince Charles. They had 14 children, of whom four daughters and a son survived into adulthood.

The following year, 1645, she accompanied Fanshawe to Spain, where he became Secretary to the British Embassy. Returning to England, her husband exerted himself strenuously in the cause of Charles I of England. He was taken prisoner at the Battle of Worcester in 1651 and for a time closely confined. His wife, not being permitted to visit him, exposed herself to great hardships in order to alleviate his painful solitude by standing to converse with him outside his window in the middle of the night and in bad weather. On his release, they withdrew to Tankersley Park, in Yorkshire, where he occupied himself with poetry and literature, and his wife turned to writing as well. A book of cookery and medicaments was compiled by Lady Fanshawe, the earliest entries, by an amanuensis, dating from 1651. Her recipe for ice cream is thought to be the earliest recorded in Europe.

They spent the latter years of the Civil War and the Interregnum travelling, for instance to Caen, Paris, The Hague, Ireland, Madrid, and Flanders, as well as London, Yorkshire, Huntingdonshire, Hertfordshire and Bath, Somerset. Richard published translations and kept in touch with the royal family. The family joined Charles II in Flanders, Richard was appointed Latin secretary and master of requests, and knighted at Breda in 1656.

After the Restoration, Richard represented the University of Cambridge in Parliament, went to Portugal to help broker Charles II's marriage to Catherine of Braganza, and served as ambassador to Portugal (1662–63) and to Spain (1664–1666). Richard died suddenly in 1666 in Madrid, after which, the widow and her family returned to England. In the first anguish of bereavement, she was exposed to such distressing poverty that she long wanted pecuniary means to deliver his remains to the tomb of his ancestors, and to maintain support of her children. Sir Richard's salary was in arrear, and no remittances could be obtained from the Ministers of the profligate King. The Queen of Spain offered Lady Fanshawe and her five children a handsome provision, on condition of their conforming to the Roman Catholic Church, but the widow withstood the temptation, even while the embalmed corpse of her husband lay daily in her sight. Means were furnished at last by the Queen Dowager of Spain, the removal to England was effected, and Sir Richard's remains were interred within the chapel of St. Mary in the church of Ware.

Later life

In widowhood, Fanshawe devoted herself to the education of her children, to acts of benevolence, and to self-improvement. In 1676, Fanshawe transcribed the manuscript Memoir of her husband (now held in the British Library) for private family circulation. It was addressed to their son Richard and began with conventional biblical and other admonitions. It is interspersed with descriptions of Richard's character as one for his son to emulate, it provides a colourful account of their adventures, and carefully observed details of clothing and customs encountered in their travels. It was also intended to vindicate the family's financial claims against the government. It ends abruptly in 1671. There is a modern edition of the Memoir.

Death and legacy

She died on 20 January 1680 in Ware, Hertfordshire, where she was buried at St Mary's Church. There is a portrait in oils of Lady Fanshawe by Cornelis Janssens van Ceulen held at the Valence House Museum in Dagenham, London, a gift from a descendant in 1963.

Style and themes

The Memoir which she wrote of herself is her best and most durable monument; a likeness is prefixed to it.

The following extract shows her character as well as her husband's:

I told him I heard the Prince had received a packet from the Queen, and I guessed he had it in his hand, and I desired to know what was in it. He smilingly replied, 'My love, I will immediately come to thee; pray thee go, for I am very busy.' When he came out of his closet I renewed my suit; he kissed me, and talked of other things. At supper I would eat nothing; he as usual sat by me, and drank often to me, which was his custom, and was full of discourse to company that was at table. Going to bed I asked him again, and said I could never believe he loved me, if he refused to tell me all he knew. He answered nothing, but stopped my mouth with kisses. I cried, and he went to sleep. Next morning very early, as his custom was, he called to rise, but began to discourse with me first, to which I made no reply; he rose, came on the other side of the bed, kissed me, drew the curtains softly, and went to court. When he came home to dinner, he presently came to me as was usual, and when I had him by the hand, I said, 'Thou dost not care to see me troubled;' to which he, taking me in his arms, answered: 'My dearest soul, nothing on earth can afflict me like that; when you asked me of my business it was wholly out of my power to satisfy thee: my life, my fortune, shall be thine, and every thought of my heart in which the trust I am in may not be revealed; but my honour is my own, which I cannot preserve if I communicate the Prince's affairs. I pray thee with this answer rest satisfied.' So great was his reason and goodness that, upon consideration, it made my folly appear to me so vile that, from that day until the day of his death, I never thought fit to ask him any business, except what be communicated freely to me in order to his estate or family.}}

In her book of recipes (1665), she left the first known written recipe for ice cream (which she called "icy cream").

References

Bibliography

References

  1. "Lady Fanshawe's ice cream recipe".
  2. Davidson, Peter; [http://www.oxforddnb.com/view/article/9146 "Fanshawe, Ann, Lady Fanshawe (1625–1680)"], ''Oxford Dictionary of National Biography'', [[Oxford University Press]], 2004. Retrieved 22 January 2015
  3. [http://web.warwick.ac.uk/english/perdita/html/pw_FANS01.htm Ann Fanshawe Biography], [[University of Warwick]]. Retrieved 17 October 2014
  4. Oxford, Museum of. (2023-03-13). "Lady Ann Fanshawe and the Royalist Court at Oxford".
  5. Davidson. (2004). "Fanshawe [née Harrison], Ann, Lady Fanshawe (1625–1680), autobiographer. Oxford Dictionary of National Biography.". Oxford.
  6. A link between the arduous travels of the Fanshawes and the early loss of many of their children is posited in Antonia Fraser: ''The Weaker Vessel: Woman's Lot in Seventeenth-Century England'', [[Weidenfeld & Nicolson]], 1984, Chapter 4
  7. [http://web.warwick.ac.uk/english/perdita/html/ms_WELL7113.htm "Lady Ann Fanshawe's book of cookery and medical receipts"], University of Warwick. Retrieved 17 October 2014
  8. [http://www.wdl.org/en/item/3960/ "Recipe Book of Lady Ann Fanshawe"], [[World Digital Library]] Retrieved 18 October 2014
  9. Day, Ivan; [http://foodhistorjottings.blogspot.hu/2012/04/lady-anne-fanshawes-icy-cream.html "Lady Ann Fanshawe's Icy Cream"], ''Food History Jottings'', Google - [[Blogger (service). Blogger]], 5 April 2012. Retrieved 17 October 2014
  10. [http://web.warwick.ac.uk/english/perdita/html/ms_BLA41161.htm "A scribal copy of Ann Fanshawe's memoirs, with corrections in Fanshawe's own hand"], University of Warwick. Retrieved 17 October 2014
  11. Cadman Seelig, Sharon; ''Autobiography and Gender in Early Modern Literature: Reading Women's Lives...'', [[Cambridge University Press]] (2006), p. 90 ff.
  12. Halkett, Anne Murray and Ann Fanshawe; ''Memoirs of Anne, Lady Halkett, and Ann, Lady Fanshawe'', ed. John Loftis. Oxford University Press, 1979. {{ISBN. 0198120877
  13. [https://artuk.org/discover/artworks/ann-fanshawe-16251680-wife-of-sir-richard-fanshawe-133510 "Ann Fanshawe (1625–1680), Wife of Sir Richard Fanshawe"], ''Your Paintings'', [[BBC]]. Retrieved 17 October 2014
  14. [[:File:Ice Cream recipe by Lady Ann Fanshawe Wellcome L0063564.jpg]]
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